An enzyme immunoassay (EIA) with monoclonal antibodies against human trypsinogen in neonatal blood-spots has been evaluated for screening for neonatal cystic fibrosis (CF). In a retrospective study, 36 of 39 CF samples were distinguished from controls matched for age and storage time. 7 infants with CF were detected in 16,500 ...

To define the incidence of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection in infants given transfusions of washed blood cells from random donors, 100 infants who were identified as being CMV seronegative at birth were resampled at hospital discharge and again six weeks after hospitalization. All infants received washed red blood cell products; 37 ...

A management programme for the control and treatment of Rh0 (D) immunized during pregnancy is presented. A total of 34,650 births were registered during a 4.5 year period and included 63 D positive newborns to D-immunized mothers. The outcome of all infants has been evaluated according to the severity of ...

A 1,700-g, 31 weeks' gestational age infant developed early onset Group B streptococcal septicemia associated with shock and respiratory distress. The infant was treated with antibiotics, exchange transfusion, and white cell transfusion. The infant improved, and then acutely deteriorated following the third white cell transfusion. Cause of death was presumed ...

An infant who died at 5 months with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy accompanied by QT prolongation was examined at autopsy. At the age of 16 days, serum IgM level was elevated (226 mg/dl). Microscopic examination revealed characteristics of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with myocardial cell hypertrophy with disarray and healed myocarditis with patchy fibrosis ...

Digitized M-mode echocardiography was used to evaluate left ventricular (LV) function in normal neonates and to document subtle abnormalities of LV function in 19 asymptomatic newborn infants with polycythemia and hyperviscosity. Echocardiograms were performed before and after partial exchange transfusion and at 48 hours of age. Results were compared to ...

We conducted studies of both red cell (RBC) and leukocyte (WBC) antibody formation in infants following multiple transfusions given during the first weeks of life. Fifty-three infants received 683 RBC transfusions from 503 different donors, plus 62 platelet, 4 granulocyte, and 53 fresh-frozen plasma units during the first 4 months ...

An 8-month-old male infant with cystic fibrosis developed quadriplegia secondary to spinal cord compression. Surgery revealed an extensive intradural hematoma from C3 to T9. An underlying structural source of bleeding was not identified and the patient did not have a coagulopathy. Repeated chest physiotherapy was the only known trauma that ...

Between 1950 and 1970 there was a steady decline in the number of infant deaths from rhesus haemolytic disease of the newborn in the Yorkshire Region but no decrease in the number of pregnant women with antibodies. Following the introduction of Rh prophylaxis in 1970, the number of pregnant women ...

Severe transient hyperammonemia is a disorder of unknown etiology which can be successfully treated. This article describes two infants affected by this condition and reviews the pertinent literature. Forty-nine cases, including our own, are summarized. Large prematures (mean birthweight 2534 +/- 738 gm, gestational age 36.1 +/- 4.05 weeks) and ...

The combination of polycythemia and hyperviscosity in the newborn is a common problem. The incidence will vary depending on the environment and population involved because factors such a high altitude and high-risk pregnancies will markedly influence the incidence of this complication. The timing of the cord clamping at birth in ...

Meconium ileus and pancreatic changes, as described in cystic fibrosis, were found, at autopsy, in a series of six infants who received prolonged neonatal intensive care for prematurity. Cystic fibrosis had not been suspected clinically. These pathological findings are so frequent in sick premature infants, amounting to 12% of all ...

This chapter has reviewed the deficiencies in immune defense that place the neonate, particularly the premature infant, at increased risk of invasive bacterial disease. We also have reviewed the literature on the rationale for exchange transfusion, granulocyte transfusion, intravenous immunoglobulin, and fibronectin administration as immunotherapeutic agents in infected infants. There ...

Young infants with cystic fibrosis (CF) are at risk for developing symptomatic protein-calorie malnutrition (PCM) characterized by hypoalbuminemia, edema, and anemia. We reviewed the hospital charts of all infants less than 12 months of age referred to our CF clinic between 1979 and 1982 and found nine patients with PCM ...

Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) have an increased nasal transepithelial potential difference (PD) which reflects increased sodium absorption across epithelium relatively impermeable to chloride. To evaluate nasal epithelial function in neonates with CF, the PD was recorded and the voltage response to superfusion of 10(-5M) amiloride, an inhibitor of sodium ...

Cerebral arterial pulsatile flow changes and the effect of partial plasma exchange transfusion on these pulsatile flow patterns were studied in neonatal polycythemia/hyperviscosity syndrome by transcutaneous Doppler technique. Twenty-two infants with cord blood hematocrit greater than 58% (greater than 2 SD above the mean) were studied from a total of ...

The polyamines associated to human erythrocytes from healthy donors are mainly localized intracellularly. In fact chromatography of the erythrocytes on a resin which has a high affinity and capacity for polyamines does not affect the amount of polyamines associated to the erythrocytes. The low ability of spermine to adsorb to ...

At no other time of life is the decision to transfuse potentially as difficult as in the newborn period. Superimposed upon complex "physiologic" changes in the ability to deliver and release oxygen are varying requirements among infants in terms of oxygen need. These are compounded by changes brought about as ...

Two premature infants who had episodes of hemolysis following blood transfusion are described. No incompatibility was found between donor and infant in either case. Further investigation of the donors' blood excluded other possible causes of hemolysis. The only anomaly found was that the donors were glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficient, while ...

An Rh positive woman having the Rh(D) variant designated DVI formed a potent anti-D which caused a severe haemolytic disease in the infant. The infant received three exchange transfusions within the first 21 hours after delivery and, because of a 'late anaemia', three additional blood transfusions during the first 3 ...

Deformability of red blood cells (RBC) is an important determinant of microcirculation, of oxygen transport and release to the tissues, and of RBC life span. Deformability of RBC from five fetuses, 20 preterm infants, 20 term neonates, and 20 adults was determined by direct microscopic observation of RBC subjected to ...

The purpose of this study is to compare a revised rule of thumb with the Harriet Lane and Behrman's formulas for predicting haematocrit rise following packed red blood cell (PRBC) transfusion in premature neonates. Pre- and post-transfusion, equilibrated central haematocrits were obtained within 24 h of transfusion in 12 premature ...

Two controversial issues of neonatal transfusion practices, erythrocyte 'booster' transfusions and granulocyte transfusions, are critically reviewed, and current recommendations for transfusion practices are made. Infants should receive erythrocyte transfusions to treat congestive heart failure caused primarily by anemia. It is customary to maintain the hematocrit at greater than 40% in ...

Methodology was established to analyze T lymphocytes and T cell subsets with monoclonal antibodies on microsamples of blood obtained by heel puncture in infants. Results in 39 high-risk infants indicated that during the early neonatal period they had a higher percentage of T4-bearing cells and a lower percentage of T8 ...

The dispositions of the plasticizer di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) and its primary metabolite mono-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (MEHP) were studied in newborn infants subjected to exchange transfusions. During a single exchange transfusion the amounts of DEHP and MEHP infused ranged from 0.8-3.3 and 0.05-0.20 mg kg-1 body weight, respectively. There were indications that ...

Although infants with neonatal polycythemia and hyperviscosity often present with cardiorespiratory distress, little information is available regarding the cardiac function of such babies before or after partial exchange transfusion. To assess cardiac function, we performed M-mode echocardiograms in 19 asymptomatic newborn infants (4 to 12 hours of age) who had ...

Essential to the management of the sick, low birth weight infant is maintenance of a neutral thermal environment by use of convection incubators and radiant warmers. Manipulation of the infant in preparation for transfusion and the transfusion of cold blood could theoretically lower the infant's body temperature, subsequently contribute to ...

The immunologic status and the occurrence of alloimmunization against granulocytes, platelets, lymphocytes, and red cells was evaluated in 33 babies who received granulocyte transfusion because of neonatal sepsis. Nine age-matched babies were examined as control. A first group of 19 infants was examined only once between 6 and 23 months ...

Four fetuses with severe rhesus isoimmunization were transfused with packed red blood cells directly into the umbilical vein. The outcome was successful in three. In one infant, this ultrasound-guided technique resulted in resolution of severe fetal hydrops at 27 weeks, allowing delivery of a healthy nonhydropic infant at 33 weeks, ...

Reproductive compensation may be prezygotic or postzygotic. Prezygotic compensation is the replacement of inviable infants by one or more additional births. When the marital fertility rates are greater than necessary to replace the parents, however, many traditional societies ensured that any surviving progeny in excess of two (on average) did ...

The exposure of newborn infants to the plasticizer di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) and its primary metabolite mono-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (MEHP) was studied during exchange transfusions by measuring their contents in the infused blood. Plasma concentrations of DEHP and MEHP in the blood withdrawn from the infants during the transfusions also were determined. ...

A 7-year-old burro jack was examined because of recurrent rectal prolapse and severe cough. The prolapse was reduced manually and a cough associated with bronchopneumonia responded to antimicrobial therapy. The rectal prolapse recurred and again was reduced manually. During exploratory celiotomy a cystic calculus was identified and removed. Severe protracted ...

The use of partial plasma exchange transfusion in newborns with polycythemia and hyperviscosity was evaluated. Ninety-three infants with polycythemia and hyperviscosity were randomly assigned to receive either partial plasma exchange transfusion or symptomatic treatment; the infants were matched with control infants without polycythemia. Neonatal course and outcome at 1 and ...

The incidence of and mortality from cystic fibrosis in New Zealand from 1960 to 1983, has been reviewed. Cystic fibrosis subjects have been located from data obtained from New Zealand paediatricians, the Cystic Fibrosis Association and hospital admission records. Mortality figures in the years 1960-1982 were also obtained. The incidence ...

1 069 newborns were subjected to exchange transfusion with fresh heparinized blood in the years 1968, 1971, 1974, 1977 and 1981. There were 258 infants with Rh disease, 328 with hyperbilirubinemia with ABO incompatibility, 436 with hyperbilirubinemia without ABO incompatibility and 47 infants without hyperbilirubinemia or evidence of hemolytic disease. ...

Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is a term applied to the sudden death of an infant that defies explanation. The infant apnea syndrome (formerly the near-miss for SIDS) has come to apply to a different population of infants who are unlikely to have died from SIDS. The use of monitoring ...

The first bicarbonate pool sizes and kinetic data necessary for the interpretation of substrate oxidation studies have been determined in six fed, nonacidotic infants, ages 2.5 to 5 months. Following an intravenous bolus of NaH13CO3 (50 mumol/kg), breath samples were collected over 240 min for the analysis of breath 13CO2. ...

We observed a temporary rise in the percentage of fetal hemoglobin (HbF%) in small preterm infants after cessation of frequent replacement transfusions. We prospectively studied 10 very low birthweight infants, who received frequent transfusions in the first several weeks of life, to determine the influence on oxygen affinity (P50). After ...

Gastroesophageal reflux (GER) was initially diagnosed in two black infants, aged 5 and 9 months, as a cause of their chronic lung disease and failure to thrive. Both infants were treated with bethanechol chloride as part of the management of their GER, but respiratory failure developed in both patients and ...

Red cell glycolytic intermediates and ATP were evaluated in 47 appropriate for gestational age preterm infants on the 1st day of life who were divided into three groups on the basis of gestational age: 28-30, 31-33, and 34-36 wk. The results were compared to those previously obtained in term infants. ...

Postheparin plasma lipoprotein lipase and hepatic lipase activities of 11 preterm infants aged 1 to 4 days were measured 15 min after a heparin bolus of 100 IU/kg and during an exchange transfusion performed with fresh heparinized blood. Each infant had a birth weight (range, 1210-3490 g) appropriate for gestational ...

Two preterm infant boys not known to be at risk developed clinical, laboratory, and pathologic features of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) after receiving multiple blood transfusions in the neonatal period. Their clinical courses were characterized by failure to thrive, recurrent otitis media, hepatomegaly, and fatal interstitial pneumonia. Laboratory evaluation ...

A young woman with acquired chronic pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) gave birth to 3 infants with foetal hydrops. The 1st infant died shortly after birth, while the 2nd was stillborn with severe anaemia. Both had signs of increased erythropoiesis at autopsy. The 3rd infant was saved by foetal intrauterine ...